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Moment
of Indiana History: Scripts Women
of the Indy 500
MP3
Audio
Ladies and “Gentlemen, Start Your Engines.” Women
in the Indy 500, on this Moment of Indiana History.
The spring before he died, Indianapolis Motor Speedway owner Tony Hulman
got the Indy 500 started in a new way. “In company with the first
lady to qualify at Indianapolis,” Hulman announced, “Gentlemen,
Start Your Engines!” The break with tradition at the opening of
the 1977 event reflected the participation of pioneer Janet Guthrie, who
had made Indy 500 history with her qualifying lap speed. Technically,
Hulman could have gotten away with his usual invocation—since the
“gentlemen” starting the engines were the drivers’ mechanics—were
it not for Guthrie’s friend Kay Bignotti, a certified mechanic,
who made a point of starting Guthrie’s car for the historic event.
Guthrie came to the sport after professional stints as a pilot, aerospace
engineer and sports car road racer. She raced at Indy three times with
her best finish in 1978 in ninth place.
Since Guthrie crashed the Brickyard’s gender line, female drivers
have not exactly raced in. Four women have passed the Indy 500 driving
test in the meantime, and only three of those have started the race. Lyn
St. James holds the record for most laps completed at Indy, having started
in seven races from 1992-97 and in 2000. That year, she shared the oval
with another woman, Sarah Fisher, who started each subsequent year through
2004. Danica Patrick, who raced in the 2005 and 2006 events, finished
fourth overall in 2005, distinguishing herself that year as the first
woman to have led the pack at two separate points in the race.
The rarity of female participation in the Indy 500, and racing in general,
has been attributed to the sport’s entrenched sexism. Before 1971,
even Tony Hulman’s daughter was barred from checking in on the pit
crew servicing the race car she owned. These days Mari Hulman George announces
the start of the race. Although some effort goes into recruiting and developing
female drivers, such as a program started by Lyn St. James, many point
to the industry’s reluctance to give women the financial backing
they need to succeed in the sport. Danica Patrick, by contrast, has enjoyed
the top-rung support of the Rahal-Letterman team. Patrick’s acceptance
into the inner circles of racing, however, bears consideration in light
of the extent to which she been marketed as a sex symbol.
This Moment of Indiana History is a production of the Indiana Public Broadcasting
Stations in association with the Indiana Historical Society. More information
is available on-line at “moment of Indiana history.org.”
Writer: Yaël Ksander
This Moment
of Indiana History is a production of the Indiana Public Broadcasting
Stations in association with the Indiana Historical Society. More information
is available at “Moment of Indiana history dot org."
For more information:
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